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That makes it a bit clearer, but... So MPEG LA wanted to find proof that VP8 was covered by software patents, but couldn't find enough, and now they officially gave up? It doesn't sound like a particularly important change...

There is no significant change for individual users, but it affect many corporations who don't want pay for MPEG-4.
The potential risk of being sued by MPEG LA will make many companies use MPEG-4 instead of WebM.

Now we may see wider usage of WebM, and hoping Google will continue to improve its image quality (WebM is terrible for HD compared with x264 implementation).

But yeah, besides WebRTC, this ship has already sailed. So VP9 better be at least as good as h.265, but they need to finish it this year, and have chips have support for it next year, otherwise it might be too late again to see widespread adoption of it.

But yeah, besides WebRTC, this ship has already sailed. So VP9 better be at least as good as h.265, but they need to finish it this year, and have chips have support for it next year, otherwise it might be too late again to see widespread adoption of it.

H.264 encoded with the latest x264 offers notably higher quality while encoding almost twice as fast as VP8 encoded with the latest libvpx offering. If you see a test claiming that VP8 is better than H.264 quality-wise, it is very likely that the comparison was done poorly, either by mistake or intentionally.

To remove the looming threats of MPEG-LA's on manufacturers considering using VP8. They were using a common patent troll tactic - threaten with lawsuit if they don't pay up. Many of the small developers pay the trolls just to get rid of them, and that's exactly what Google did here. Not idealistic at all, and I don't like it, but it was a very efficient and pragmatic way to solve the problem, and get manufacturers and software vendors to support VP8 without any fear of lawsuits.

VP8 is also the standard codec for WebRTC. This looming threat of lawsuits could've also hurt the adoption of WebRTC, at least for a few more years until there would have been a lawsuit, and settled things once and for all - if ever.

No problem. I know you guys like to harp on Apple but a bit of a history lesson here for you about me. I have worked for the "evil empires" and I have worked for the "underdogs". I have worked on projects under every major license there is, proprietary and open. To tell you the truth, licensing as a whole, turns my stomach no matter what license it is but I also respect the right of coder who absolutely, unequivocally have the right to determine how his code used. If he decides to lock it away from prying eyes, that is his right and his reasons for doing so are neither right nor wrong, just his decision. Too me, freedom of choice trumps all.

I don't dwell on idealismís but I do understand the necessities of what some see as evils. In an ideal world, I would not have to worry about feeding the family, I would not have to lock my vehicles and wish that I could make everyones world a happy place. Unfortunately, that only happens in fairy tales so I make the best I can with the resource available. I'm one of the oldest members of the SuSE/openSUSE crowd and proud of it. I love to reflect and see it's humble beginnings of a German oriented slackware fork to see it mature into it's own entity. I love the fact that it is a community directed distro now where the END USER is the primary concern. Canonicals hijinx as of late is something years in the making and foreseeable if you did not buy the whole "our upstream is debian" excuse. There are distro's that actually care about the entire ecosystem like Redhat and openSUSE but Shuttleworth has always, in my eyes, been an opportunist that hides in sheeps clothing. Canonical and him don't give a shit about the greater good of the entire ecosystem. I rate them with the likes of Oracle, lots of lip flapping and no action to improve things. At least with the likes of MS and Apple, they are relatively upfront where they are coming from. There are two sides to every coin, and I have worked both sides of that. I don't like how people immediately deem xyz is evil and zyx is good especially when they have no real practical experience in side a or side b. I have a unique perspective that is shared by only a few that have been privileged to see how everything actually works on either end of the spectrum and both have their merits in the real world.

To remove the looming threats of MPEG-LA's on manufacturers considering using VP8. They were using a common patent troll tactic - threaten with lawsuit if they don't pay up. Many of the small developers pay the trolls just to get rid of them, and that's exactly what Google did here. Not idealistic at all, and I don't like it, but it was a very efficient and pragmatic way to solve the problem, and get manufacturers and software vendors to support VP8 without any fear of lawsuits.

If google trully believed that WebM did not infringe then they would not have "settled" but offer indemnity to users. Google rattled the sword only to keep it sheathed and then offered a peacekeeping.